For details see the [http://clean.cs.ru.nl/download/Clean24/CleanLicenseConditions.txt Clean License Conditions]

For details see the [http://clean.cs.ru.nl/download/Clean24/CleanLicenseConditions.txt Clean License Conditions]

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== Windows ==

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== Clean and iTasks (Development) ==

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=== Latest stable release ===

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We provide automated nightly builds from the development branches in version control (a mix of git and subversion) of the various components that Clean consists of. We are constantly improving the quality control of these builds, but don't expect a perfectly stable system.

Running Clean on Linux is a little different than running Clean on Windows. First of all, there is no IDE available, which means that you have to manage your projects using command-line tools. The primary tool to run Clean on Linux is <tt>clm</tt>. This is a small wrapper tool around the compiler that checks which files have changed and need to be (re)compiled. It is basically a Clean-specific <tt>make</tt> replacement.

Running Clean on Linux is a little different than running Clean on Windows. First of all, there is no IDE available, which means that you have to manage your projects using command-line tools. The primary tool to run Clean on Linux is <tt>clm</tt>. This is a small wrapper tool around the compiler that checks which files have changed and need to be (re)compiled. It is basically a Clean-specific <tt>make</tt> replacement.

Clean and iTasks (Development)

We provide automated nightly builds from the development branches in version control (a mix of git and subversion) of the various components that Clean consists of. We are constantly improving the quality control of these builds, but don't expect a perfectly stable system.

Clean 2.4 (Stable)

Windows

Linux

Running Clean on Linux is a little different than running Clean on Windows. First of all, there is no IDE available, which means that you have to manage your projects using command-line tools. The primary tool to run Clean on Linux is clm. This is a small wrapper tool around the compiler that checks which files have changed and need to be (re)compiled. It is basically a Clean-specific make replacement.